The Cuban Missile Crisis
has been dissected and explored to a level of granular detail by dramatists and
historians and politicians ever since those harrowing events of October 1962
concluded, since it’s very likely that was the closest the world has ever come
to thermonuclear war. Yet as this excellent made-for-TV drama underscores, the
lasting lesson is not just how easily men of hostile intent nearly drove two
nations into globally destructive conflict, but how skillfully men of
conscience defused the situation. Historically, much of the credit for ending
the crisis rightfully goes to then-Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy for a
crucial strategy suggestion he made late in the game, but The Missiles of October conveys that the world was saved by the
collective efforts of RFK, President John F. Kennedy, and Soviet Premier Nikita
Krushchev, among many others. In today’s post-9/11 era of brinksmanship and
escalation, the lessons in The Missiles
of October are perhaps more important than ever.
From an aesthetic
perspective, The Missiles of October
is highly unusual. Shot on videotape, it’s essentially a recording of a play,
even though many cinematic flourishes are employed. (For instance, each act
opens with a shot of a giant board bearing the show’s title and flags, with the
camera zooming into the flag of the nation where the act’s first scene takes
place.) Moreover, The Missiles of October
is quite long, running two and a half hours even without commercials, so the
storytelling is gradual, methodical, and specific. Viewers are taken all the
way from the U.S. government’s first discovery that Russian missile bases are
being assembled on the island nation of Cuba to the final resolution between
the U.S., thrown into a defensive posture by the presence of missiles 90 miles
off the coast of Florida, and the U.S.S.R., desperate to save face even though surrender
is the only sane option. A fantastic cast tells the story, with William
Devane’s alternately contemplative and intense portrayal of JFK dominating.
He’s matched almost perfectly with Martin Sheen, who plays RFK. Together, they
sketch a believable family bond while also expressing the horrible stakes of
the crisis in their pained faces.
Whereas Devane and Sheen mimic the Kennedy
brothers’ famous Boston accents, Howard Da Silva uses an unadorned American
vocal style while playing Krushchev. In context, this choice works, because
viewers aren’t distracted by dialect or subtitles while parsing the subtle
moves that Krushchev made while maneuvering around Kremlin hawks to avoid
disaster. Others familiar players in the cast are Ralph Bellamy, Dana Elcar,
Michael Lerner, and Nehemiah Persoff, and character actor Thayer David provides
occasional narration. Seen today, The
Missiles of October might strike some viewers as aesthetically deficient,
what with the grainy newsreel clips to illustrate military action and the use
of minimalistic sets. Nonetheless, this film articulates the broad strokes of a
key event in world history, as well as many of the most important nuances, with
grace and power, eventually morphing from a docudrama to a taut thriller. The
time one invests to watch The Missiles of
October is rewarded handsomely.
The Missiles of October: GROOVY
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